Palais de Karnak Sanctuaire de Granit et Salle Hypostyle カルナック宮殿の花崗岩の聖域と列柱ホール
DU CAMP, Maxime デュ・カン, マクシム
- Collection of
- Tokyo Photographic Art Museum
- Series title
- THEBES
- Title
- Palais de Karnak Sanctuaire de Granit et Salle Hypostyle
- Original title
- Palais de Karnak Sanctuaire de Granit et Salle Hypostyle
- Artist Name
- DU CAMP, Maxime
- Year
- 1849-1849
- Material / Technique
- Salted print
- Dimensions
- 161x216mm
- Accession number
- 20106493
- Tokyo Photographic Art Museum “Search the Collection”
- https://collection.topmuseum.jp/Publish/detailPage/4098/
Other items of Tokyo Photographic Art Museum (41996)
Early Works of FUKUMORI Hakuyo No.4
FUKUMORI Hakuyo
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum
Hanamatsuri Sakaki Oni going through a private home
HAGA Hideo
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum
Poisonous Flowers Bar street, Isezakicho backstreet
TOKIWA Toyoko
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum
untitled
KURIGAMI Kazumi
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum
Landscape
FONTANA, Franco
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum
PHENAKISTISCOPES Disc for Heliocinegraph
Photographer unknown
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum
(Yokohama Album) VIEW OF KIOTO.
KUSAKABE Kinbee
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum
Night photos Negishi, Yokohama City
SHIBATA Toshio
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum
Early Works of FUKUMORI Hakuyo No.3
FUKUMORI Hakuyo
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum
Cold evening in spring
FUKUMORI Hakuyo
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum
JAPAN … A CHAPTER OF IMAGE DD-51 (Ueno Station)
SMITH, W. Eugene
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum
Tokyo Mid Ⅰ
TAKAHASHI Junko
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum
Russo-Japanese War through the Stereoscope
UNDERWOOD & UNDERWOOD
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum
Carte de Visite No.7
Photographer unknown
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum
A family of Japanese immigrants living in a Japanese settlement in the town of Jarabacoa in the mountains of the Dominican Republic. Emigration from Japan to the Dominican republic began in the 1950s during the regime of Rafael Trujillo, but the Japanese government's recruitment promises of grants of up to 18 hectares of good farmland and other incentives were not honored. There was also friction between the Japanese immigrants and the local people. In 2006, the Japanese government formally apologized to the Japanese immigrants
OKAMURA Akihiko
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum
(Portraits in Bakumatsu-Meiji Period) Ro □□ Sen
Photographer unknown
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum